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Ressources en Développement Les psychologues humanistes branchés ! | |
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L'usure de compassion est une maladie professionnelle. C'est le type de stress secondaire caractéristique dont souffrent les intervenants fréquemment exposés aux phénomènes post-traumatiques. Il est le résultat inévitable d'un envahissement émotionnel progressif. L'usure de compassion n'est pas assimilable au burnout. Elle se prévient et se traite de façon différente. Contrairement au burnout, elle se déclare brutalement, mais il est possible de la résorber assez rapidement. L'usure de compassion se manifeste par des symptômes de réaction post-traumatique et devant le poids émotionnel qui l'accable, le professionnel a tendance à s'isoler.
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(Tuc) Vous savez que vous êtes en danger d'usure de compassion ou de burnout. Vous ne savez peut-être pas jusqu'à quel point. Pour vérifier votre impression, répondez au Tuc. Ce test auto-administrable de C.R. Figley vous permettra de préciser votre degré de risque. Une quinzaine de minutes suffisent.
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Table des matières Compassion Fatigue: Coping with Secondary Traumatic Stress Disorder in Those Who Treat the Traumatized. Par Charles R. Figley, Ph.D. Acknowledgments Contributors Introduction 1. Compassion Fatigue as Secondary Traumatic Stress Disorder: An Overview Charles R. Figley 2. Survival Strategies: A Framework for Understanding Secondary Traumatic Stress and Coping in Helpers Paul Valent 3. Working with People in Crisis: Research Implications Randal D. Beaton and Shirley A. Murphy 4. Working with People with PTSD: Research Implications Mary Ann Dutton and Francine L. Rubinstein 5. Sensory-Based Therapy for Crisis Counselors Chrys J. Harris 6. Debriefing and Treating Emergency Workers Susan L. McCammon and E. Jackson Allison, Jr. 7. Treating the "Heroic Treaters" Mary S. Cerney 8. Treating Therapists with Vicarious Traumatization and Secondary Traumatic Stress Disorders Laurie Anne Pearlman and Karen W. Saakvitne 9. Preventing Secondary Traumatic Stress Disorder ]anet Yassen 10. Preventing Compassion Fatigue: A Team Treatment Model James F. Munroe, Jonathan Sl2ay, Lisa Fisher, Christine Makary, Katlayn Rapperport, and Rose Zimering 11. Preventing Institutional Secondary Traumatic Stress Disorder Don Catherall Epilogue: The Transmission of Trauma Name Index Subject Index
Table des matières Secondary Traumatic Stress: Self-Care Issues for Clinicians, Researchers, & Educators. Par Seligman, M., Weathers, F.W., Williams, T. B. Hudnall Stamm, Ph. D. Introduction B. Hudnall Stamm, Ph. D. Chapter 1 Compassion Fatigue: Toward a New Understanding of the Costs of Caring Cbarles R. Figley, Ph.D. Chapter 2 Secondary Exposure to Trauma and Self Reported Distress Among Therapists Kelly R. Chrestman, Ph. D. Chapter 3 The Risks Treating Sexual Trauma: Stress and Secondary Trauma in Psychotherapists Nancy Kassam-Adams, Ph.D. Chapter 4 Self Care for Trauma Therapists: Ameliorating Vicarious Traumatization Laurie Anne Pearlmnan, Ph.D. Chapter 5 Helpers' Responses to Trauma Work: Understanding and Intervening in an Organization Dena J. Rosenbloom, Ph. D., Anne C. Pratt, Ph. D., and Laurie Anne Pearlman, Ph.D. Chapcer 6 Coping with Secondary Traumatic Stress: The Importance of the Therapist's Professional Peer Group Don R. Catherall, Ph. D. Chapter 7 Communication and Self Care: Foundational Issues Chrys J. Harris, Ph. D. and Jon G. Linder, M. Ed Chapter 8 Painful Pedagogy: Teaching About Trauma in Academic and Training Settings Susan L. McCammon, Ph. D. Chapter 9 Trauma-Based Psychiatry for Primary Care Lyndra J. Bills, M. D. Chapter 10 Kelengakutelleghpat: An Artic Community-Based Approach to Trauma Michael J. Terry, R. N., A. N. P. Chapter 11 Creating Virtual Community: Telemedicine and Self Care B. Hudnall Stamm, Ph. D. and Frederick W Pearce, Ph. D. Chapter 12 Ethical Issues Associaced wich Secondary Traumain Thetapists James F. Munroe, Ed D. Chapter 13 Self Care and the Vulnerable Therapist Mary Beth Williams, Ph.D. and John F Sommer Jr. Chapter 14 No Escape from Philosophy in Trauma Treatment and Research Jonathan Shay, M. D., Ph. D. Chapter 15 The Germ Theory of Trauma: The Impossibility of Ethical Neutrality Sandra L. Bloom, M.D. Contributors About the Sidran Foundation
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